Co-seismic displacements of the 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- Published by Seismological Society of America (SSA) in Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
- Vol. 86 (1B), S19-S36
- https://doi.org/10.1785/bssa08601b0s19
Abstract
The 17 January 1994 Northridge, California, earthquake significantly deformed the Earth's crust in the epicentral region. Displacements of 66 survey stations determined from Global Positioning System (GPS) observations collected before and after the earthquake show that individual stations were uplifted by up to 417 ± 5 mm and displaced horizontally by up to 216 ± 3 mm. Using these displacements, we estimate parameters of a uniform-slip model. Fault geometry and slip are estimated independent of seismological information, using Monte Carlo optimization techniques that minimize the model residuals. The plane that best fits the geodetic data lies 1 to 2 km above the plane indicated by aftershock seismicity. Modeling for distributed slip on a coplanar, yet larger model fault indicates that a high-slip patch occurred up-dip and northwest of the mainshock hypocenter and that less than 1 m of slip occurred in the uppermost 5 km of the crust. This finding is consistent with the lack of clear surface rupture and with the notion that the intersection with the fault that ruptured in 1971 formed the up-dip terminus of slip in the Northridge earthquake. Displacements predicted by either of these simple models explain most of the variance in the data within 50 km of the epicenter. On average, however, the scatter of the residuals is twice the data uncertainties, and in some areas, there is significant systematic misfit to either model. The co-seismic contributions of aftershocks are insufficient to explain this mismatch, indicating that the source geometry is more complicated than a single rectangular plane.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- The 1994 Northridge earthquake sequence in California: Seismological and tectonic aspectsJournal of Geophysical Research, 1995
- A balanced cross-section of the 1994 Northridge earthquake, southern CaliforniaNature, 1994
- The Magnitude 6.7 Northridge, California, Earthquake of 17 January 1994Science, 1994
- Stress Triggering of the 1994 M = 6.7 Northridge, California, Earthquake by Its PredecessorsScience, 1994
- Discrepancy between geological and geodetic deformation rates in the Ventura basinNature, 1993
- Detection of crustal deformation from the Landers earthquake sequence using continuous geodetic measurementsNature, 1993
- Absolute far-field displacements from the 28 June 1992 Landers earthquake sequenceNature, 1993
- Using the F-test for eigenvalue decomposition problems to find the statistically ‘optimal’ solutionGeophysical Research Letters, 1991
- Regional deformation of the earth model for the Los Angeles region, CaliforniaTectonophysics, 1984
- SOME GEOPHYSICAL APPLICATIONS OF THE ELASTICITY THEORY OF DISLOCATIONSCanadian Journal of Physics, 1958